2009-07-25 42 -72

From Geohashing
2009-07-25 42 -72 kids.jpg
Sat 25 Jul 2009 in 42,-72:
42.8168510, -72.9049259
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Location

In Harriman Reservoir, in southern Vermont. This would have been a water geohash. We tried to get there by canoe, and didn't make it, but had a great day anyway.

Participants

Sara with her daughter and son.

Expedition

We had to try for this hash, because it was in Vermont, and a water geohash would have finished my four-state reverse regional achievement in style, but I knew before we started that it was unlikely we'd make it to the hashpoint, and indeed we didn't.

The hashpoint was about 2/3 of the way south in Harriman Reservoir, a serpentine lake in southern Vermont. The problem is that the only place to rent a canoe on the reservoir is at the northern tip of the reservoir, and the reservoir is so curvy that one would have to paddle about (... we pause here for English-to-metric conversion...) 8 km to get to the hashpoint from the canoe rental place, and I don't really know how to control a canoe. We tried anyway, though, and had a great day.

If it weren't for geohashing, it's unlikely that I would ever have taken my kids canoeing at all.

We started out two hours later than I wanted to, which is about typical for us. The road from the Interstate to the reservoir was pretty, and full of tourist shops selling cheese and maple syrup. We rented a canoe in Wilmington, VT and the kids got little kid-sized wooden paddles, which was great because we didn't have to worry about a full-sized paddle going overboard, and they could help paddle without wearing themselves out or whacking each other.

The weather was great and the lake was beautiful. It would have been even better with fewer motorboats, but it was still great.

As I said, I started the day not knowing how to control a canoe. Most of my effort seemed to just make the canoe turn on its own axis. I kept having to move the paddle from one side of the canoe to the other, but I only hit my son in the head with the paddle once before we figured out that he ought to sit farther forward. After an hour, we had progressed only about 1km. Actually, we had covered much more distance than that, zigzagging around, but we were maybe 1km from where we started, and it was clear there was no way we were going to make it to the hashpoint and back that afternoon. We turned back after about an hour and forty five minutes. By the end of the afternoon, I wasn't much better at steering a canoe than I was at the beginning, but we did manage to get back to the place where we started without hitting anything significant. The kids had a great attitude the whole time.

We returned our rented gear and then ate dinner at a restaurant where they made really good ice cream on the premises, which you can eat while watching the cars on the road, which is a big plus for my son. Then we drove home.

(By the way, renting a canoe somewhere else and driving it to a place on the shoreline nearer to the hashpoint would not have been possible for me and the kids. We had to rent the canoe right on the reservoir, because it was all I could do to get the canoe across the street from the rental place and into the water - I could never have gotten a canoe on and off the top of the car and from the road to the shoreline)

I'm calling this "Not reached - Technology" because I think we could have made it with a kayak.

Photos

My daughter took most of these pictures.